Three Mile Island: 35 years later

March 28, 2014 | 12:01 AM

Three Mile Island was the most serious accident in U.S. commercial nuclear power plant operating history.

Today marks the 35th anniversary of the worst nuclear accident in U.S. history. On March 28th, 1979 one of the reactors at the The Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Dauphin County partially melted down.

Back then, no one knew exactly what was going to happen. The incident was unprecedented.

Former Governor Dick Thornburgh was at the center of the crisis. He marked the anniversary at an event Thursday at Penn State’s Harrisburg campus in Middletown–not far from the plant.

Thornburgh remains troubled the country still has no long-term plan to handle its nuclear waste.

“The solution to the problem of nuclear waste has to be at the top of anybody’s to-do list, when it comes to ensuring we’re going to have a vital nuclear energy industry that can contribute to our further economic growth,” he says.

Former Middletown Mayor Robert Reid was also in the thick of the emergency response. He’s spent decades living in the shadow of the plant’s massive cooling towers.

Reid had just been elected when the accident happened. Like many people at the time, he had trouble getting credible information about the threat it posed.

“Back, 35 years ago, I was well… anti-nuclear,” he says. “But with the operation of the plant now, by this company– I think it’s a good neighbor. I’ve changed my mind about nuclear energy.”

The plant’s still operational Unit 1 reactor is now owned by Exelon, while the mothballed Unit 2 reactor is owned by FirstEnergy.

In the years since the accident, no new plants have been commissioned in the United States, and regulatory oversight has increased, according to Neil Sheehan a spokesman for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

“This did have significant impacts across the US nuclear power industry and for nuclear power plants around the world.”

The decommissioning of the plant and restoration of the site is still decades away.

The license for the Unit 1 reactor expires in 20 years. At that point, both reactors will be dismantled together, over a 10 year period. Plans call for a full restoration of the site by 2054 — 75 years after the accident.

“Thirty-five years later, we’re a bookmark,” says Eric Epstein, of the nuclear watchdog group, Three Mile Island Alert. ”Chernobyl happened, then Fukushima happened. Unfortunately we’re part of an exclusive club that has experienced a nuclear catastrophe.”

He says since there is currently nowhere to take the waste, it has be indefinitely entombed on the island in the middle of the Susquehanna River and he’s not hopeful it will be removed this century.

“This is an inter-generational problem for people who have yet to be born, and that’s not fair,” he says.

“I think as adults we have to come to grips with the fact that we’ve created a hazardous waste site and we’ll have to guard it—isolate it—for hundreds, if not thousands of years.”

The decommissioning plans were outlined in a report that was submitted last summer to the NRC. Although the agency isn’t required to give an official approval, it’s still reviewing the proposal.

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Comments

Perryjeff

Thank you to Three Mile Island Alert for protecting the public interest over these last decades. They deserve our support. The nuclear industry, their lackies in government regulatory agencies, as well as their mouthpieces in public office have lied and distorted the truth about the safety of nuclear reactors, in order to protect the industy’s profits. We need watch dog organizations like TMIA to force government to protect us from this industry.
These companies cannot compete with safe, clean renewable energy without massive government subsidies and exemption from legal liability for catastrophic accidents. A terrorist attack on a nuclear reactor could create a massive radiation release, rendering vast areas inhabitable, just like Chernobyl. And they want the public to take long-term responsibility for their dangerous wastes. There is NO technology to permanently isolate these lethal wastes from the biosphere.
The obvious answer is to stop generating more radioactive waste, and to shut down the reactors that produce it. The safest, cleanest energy comes from a nuclear reactor 90 million miles from Earth called the sun.

One wonders if the radiation figures collected during “Operation Furnace” 35 years ago will ever be released.

kurt B

As a member of E-Town student government, I was invited to take a tour of Three Mile Island on the second anniversary of the “incident”. It was a mess. It was miles of wires and conduit; the control room was so poorly designed that the gauges that stuck were behind a wall that were out of the site of the control room employees. Also, the person in charge at the time wasn’t a nuclear engineer; it was a high school graduate who passed their six week management program. They said no radiation was released, but in the years that followed, I lost my wife to cancer, I lost another Etown friend to cancer, and, thank God, I recovered from stage IV cancer. Coincidence? Maybe, but I doubt it

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